Ideal & Non Gas Kimia Fisik PPS UNP
Ideal & Non Gas Kimia Fisik PPS UNP
Ideal & Non Gas Kimia Fisik PPS UNP
Molecular compounds such as example CO,CO2 , HCl, NH3 , and CH4 (methane) are
gases, but the majority of molecular compounds are liquids or solids at room
temperature
Intermolecular force dependence: the stronger these attractions, the less likely a
compound can exist as a gas at ordinary temperatures
Boyle’s Law
Gay-Lussac’s Law
PV = nRT
where :
n = number of moles of the gas
R = the ideal gas constant
Ideal gases are defined as
having molecules with negligible size with an
average molar kinetic energy dependent only
on temperature.
At low temperature:
Most gases behave enough like ideal gases that
the ideal gas law can be applied to them.
Characteristic and properties of gases
• Boyle’s Law
• Charles’s Law
• Gay-Lussac’s Law
Boyle’s Law
Temperature
Gay-Lussac’s Law
Where :
• P is the pressure
• T is the temperature
• R is the ideal gas constant
• Vm is the molar volume
a and b are parameters that are determined
empirically for each gas, but are sometimes
estimated from their critical temperature (Tc)
and critical pressure (Pc) using these relations:
Redlich–Kwong model
Where
where :
• d is the molar density
• a, b, c, A, B, C, α, and γ are empirical
constants.
• Note that the γ constant is a derivative of
constant α and therefore almost identical to 1.
Ideal and Non Ideal Gases